French Sculpture Census, a digital archive, cataloging French sculpture in American public collections, is a project directed by Laure de Margerie, and funded by the Nasher Sculpture Center,[1] the Institut National d'Histoire de l'Art, the Musée d'Orsay, the Ecole du Louvre, and the Musée Rodin[2][3][4] Started in September 2009,[5] in December 2014, French Sculpture Census went online, providing information and images for 7,000 works of French sculpture in American collections,not only museums, but also historic houses, government buildings, corporate collections, and public space, dating from 1500, collaborating with 280 museums.
[8] June Hargrove, Professor Emerita of Art History at the University of Maryland, participates in the Advisory Committee of the French Sculpture Census.
[9][10] Laure de Margerie, was Senior Archivist and head of the Sculpture Archives at the Musée d’Orsay in Paris,[11] from 1978 through 2009, curating the exhibition Facing the Other: Charles Cordier (1827-1905), Ethnographic Sculptor (Paris, Quebec City, New York, 2004/05).
De Margerie worked as archivist in charge of historic buildings in Normandy in Rouen (1983-1985).
De Margerie was the Sculpture and Decorative Arts Department guest scholar at the J. Paul Getty Museum[12] in Los Angeles, CA (Fall 2011).